Just in time for the holidays, two Canadian brothers are selling the heartwarming gift of avoidance: Starting at just $10, you can pay someone else to end your relationship for you.

The Breakup Shop is the vision of 20-somethings Mackenzie and Evan, who declined to use their last names publicly for fear of inciting the wrath of a scorned sweetheart.

“We’re really just the messenger,” Mackenzie says.

The brothers, who described themselves as university-educated entrepreneurs, launched their business Nov. 9 with a crisply designed website that offers an array of ways to ditch your significant other.

These include a breakup text or e-mail (starting at $10), a standardized form letter (starting at $20) or a phone call ($29 and up).

If you must be single by Saturday, rush orders are available; and if you care to soothe your soon-to-be-ex’s pain, you can always send the $80 “Breakup Gift Pack,” which includes a Netflix gift card, a box of Chips Ahoy! Rainbow cookies and either “The Notebook” on Blu-ray (for those who want to cry) or the “Call of Duty: Ghosts” video game (for those who want to blow things up).

It’s the kind of gimmick that gets passed around and gawked at online — which can create a bit of a fiction, because although the service does exist, only a handful of people have used it.

They’re not the first to become breakup middlemen. There was, for example, “iDUMP4U,” launched in 2010 by a pragmatic Iowan who offered to handle people’s breakups by phone for cash, according to the Globe and Mail; or “Sorry It’s Over,” an Australian breakup service founded this year by a former nurse, according to the Daily Dot.

For now, Mackenzie and Evan are the only ones fielding breakup orders at the Breakup Shop, although they say they’re looking to recruit employees who have a background in counseling, writing and psychology.

So far, people seem more interested in becoming a professional “heartbreaker” than hiring one.

As of last week, more than 500 people have applied to work at the Breakup Shop, Mackenzie says. The number of breakup orders? Fourteen.

“We want to grow to become the biggest and best out there, and the most trusted and the most well-respected,” Mackenzie says.

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